Capital Celluloid 2021 — Day 222: Sun Dec 26

Ferris Bueller's Day Off (Hughes, 1986): Prince Charles Cinema, 3pm


Chicago Reader review:

Chicago has rarely looked more radiant than it does in Tak Fujimoto’s cinematography, but otherwise this 1986 comedy is standard John Hughes, with a few plot elements on loan from The Blues Brothers and Risky Business. Matthew Broderick, toothy and smug, plays the champion hustler of his North Shore high school (sort of an adenoidal variation on the characters Tony Curtis used to play); he concocts an elaborate scheme to cut class in favor of a joyride to the Loop with his best girl (Mia Sara), his best friend (Alan Ruck), and a borrowed Ferrari. Their adventures aren’t particularly imaginative (they have lunch, see a Cubs game, go to the Art Institute), and Hughes shifts to Breakfast Club moralizing for the last two reels, as the characters are exhorted to “believe in themselves.” Yet the overriding impression is one of utter nihilism, of a world divided into bored, crassly materialistic teenagers and doltish, unfeeling adults. With Jeffrey Jones, who displays some sharp comic timing as the vengeful principal on Bueller's trail.
Dave Kehr

Here (and above) is the trailer.

No comments:

Post a Comment